Controlled Embedding of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in ZSM-5 Zeolites

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Controlled Embedding of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in ZSM-5 Zeolites through Pre-encapsulation and Timed Release Yungchieh Lai, Michael Nicholas Rutigliano, and Götz Veser Langmuir, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b02578 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Sep 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 15, 2015

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Controlled Embedding of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in ZSM-5 Zeolites through Pre-encapsulation and Timed Release Yungchieh Lai1,2,3 Michael N. Rutigliano1, and Götz Veser1,2,3,* 1

Chemical Engineering Department, Swanson School of Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, PA, 2 U.S. DOE – National Energy Technology Laboratory, Pittsburgh, PA, 3 Center for Energy, University of Pittsburgh, PA. (*[email protected])

Abstract We report a straightforward and transferrable synthesis strategy to encapsulate metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs) in mesoporous ZSM-5 via encapsulation of NPs into silica followed by conversion of the NP@silica precursor to NP@ZSM-5. The systematic bottom-up approach allows for straightforward, precise control of both metal weight loading and size of the embedded NP, and yields uniform NP@ZSM-5 microspheres composed of stacked ZSM-5 nanorods with substantial mesoporosity. Key to the synthesis is a timed release of the embedded NPs during dissolution of the silica matrix in the hydrothermal conversion step, which finely balances the rate of NP release with the rate of SiO2 dissolution and subsequent nucleation of aluminosilica. The synthetic approach is demonstrated for Zn, Fe, and Ni oxide encapsulation into ZSM-5, but can be expected to be broadly transferrable for encapsulation of metal and metal oxide nanoparticles into other zeolite structures.

Introduction Zeolites are among the most important heterogeneous catalysts in the chemical industry due to their desirable material properties, including high thermal stability, intrinsic acidity, and their unique shape selectivity.1-2 However, the small pore size of zeolites in the micropore regime (< 2nm), which is the basis of their desirable shape selectivity, also results in poor reactant and product transport within zeolite crystals.3 This can lead to undesirable sequential reactions and—specifically for hydrocarbon conversions, which constitute a key application of zeolites in industry—can result in coke formation and subsequently

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deactivation of the catalyst.4 This effect can be mitigated through the formation of additional pores with larger pore sizes in zeolite crystallites, i.e. through formation of hierarchical pore networks.3, 5 To-date, the efforts for preparation of such a hierarchical zeolite fall broadly into two categories:6-7 First, post-synthetic de-metallization which is applicable to large-scale production can create a large amount of mesopores.8-10 This has already recently found application in de-aluminated zeolites for cumene synthesis in the KelloggDow process.11 The second approach is based on the use of templates during zeolite crystallization and can be further categorized depending on the type of template used, i.e. use of soft templates (such as cosurfactants or dual-templating surfactant12-14) or hard templates (such as carbon black or nanofibers15-17). The templating strategies generally result in more ordered mesopores, but require the use of sacrificial chemicals. Overall, despite the success in creating mesoporosity within zeolites from these methods, they are either zeolite-type sensitive18 or require sacrificial chemicals and/or expensive synthesis procedures.13-14 In parallel, much efforts has also been focused on introducing guest metals into zeolites in order to further tailor their reactivity for desired functionalities. Towards this goal, impregnation and ion exchange are the two most commonly used techniques with chemical vapor deposition emerging more recently as an alternate approach.19 However, none of these “top-down” methods can entirely avoid the (undesirable) deposition or formation of some metal nanoparticles on the external surface of the catalyst particle, resulting in uneven dispersion of the metal and typically in undesired, unselective reactions.20 Recently, an alternative, bottom-up approach has been proposed, based on inducing in-situ crystallization of zeolites using a zeolite precursor with embedded guest species (such as metal ions or nanoparticles).21-24 This early work furthermore suggested that the metal species used in the ZSM-5 crystallization are well dispersed in the final product and that some mesoporosity is simultaneously created in this synthesis strategy.21,

23

Although the mesoporosity largely seemed to result from inter-crystallite

porosity and showed low mesopore volume, a one-pot synthesis to achieve both well-dispersed guest metals and zeolites with mesoporosity is remarkable and seems worth further investigation. Furthermorer, the size

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of metal NPs which are embedded in this novel in-situ encapsulation approach has to-date not been controlled (i.e. the size of introduced NPs reported to-date depends on the choice of zeolite type or zeolite precursors21, 23-24), and no systematic study of the effect of introduced metal nanoparticles on the zeolite matrix and its mesoporosity has been reported to-date. Building on this previous work, we describe in the present contribution a straightforward and flexible synthesis strategy to embed uniform metal oxide NPs in ZSM-5 and demonstrate the approach with zinc oxide, iron oxide, and nickel oxide nanoparticles. The approach consists of three successive steps: Starting with the synthesis of size-controlled metal oxide NPs, these NPs are first encapsulated in silica, and then the amorphous silica is converted to ZSM-5. This synthesis approach allows for a straightforward size control of the embedded NPs (using the vast and growing literature on synthesis of size-controlled metal and metal oxide NPs) and results in an excellent dispersion of the NPs in the host ZSM-5. Furthermore, this systematic synthesis approach reveals a direct correlation between the embedded metal oxide nanoparticles and the morphology and mesoporosity of the final composite composite (ZnO@ZSM-5). Experimental Material synthesis: ZnO@ZSM-5. ZnO NPs were prepared via a sol-gel process adapted from previous reports.25-27 Typically, Zn(OAc)2·2H2O (1.48 g) in methanol (62.5 ml) was preheated to 600C under reflux. Then, NaOH (0.52 g) dissolved in methanol (32.5 ml) was added to initiate hydrolysis and condensation of ZnO. The mixture was stirred isothermally for 20 hrs. After the reaction, the supernatant was removed by centrifugation, the ZnO NPs were re-suspended in ethanol to wash away unreacted precursors and impurities, and the washing process was repeated three times Next, ZnO was encapsulated in amorphous silica via a modified Stöber synthesis. First, a specific weight loading of as-synthesized ZnO was re-dispersed in 200 ml of ethanol under ultrasound. 9.5 ml of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS), 4 ml DI water was added, and the mixture sonicated for 20 mins. Next, 15.25 ml

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ammonia (28wt%) dissolved in 32.5 mL of ethanol was added slowly to the solution under continuous stirring and aged for 3 hrs at 550C. The product solution was then centrifuged and re-dispersed in ethanol three times. The purified particles were dried and calcined at 5000C for 2 hrs. Pure silica NPs as a reference silica source were synthesized using the same condition as above, omitting the ZnO NPs. The ZnO@SiO2 composites were converted to the ZnO@ZSM-5 via a hydrothermal treatment. Typically, ZnO@SiO2 was added to a mixture of 0.02 g NaOH, 2.05 g tetrapropylammonium hydroxide (TPAOH, 20 wt %), 0.02 g NaAlO2 and 2.57 g deionized (DI) water to get a molar ratio of Al2O3:180SiO2:36TPAOH:5Na2O:4280H2O:xZnO. The mixture was stirred for 2 h and then transferred to a Teflon-lined autoclave and heated to 180 °C for 48 h. After cooling down to room temperature, the product was recovered by centrifuging, washed with deionized water, and dried at 100 °C overnight. Pure ZSM-5 was synthesized as reference material via the same procedure, replacing ZnO@silica with pure (i.e. ZnOfree) silica NPs. It is noteworthy that consistency in the nominal ZnO weight loading with the actual measured weight loadings throughout the synthesis steps suggests that the ZnO NPs remain intact and Zn dissolution from the NPs does not play a significant role in this synthesis. MeO@ZSM-5 (MeO= Fe2O3, NiO). Following the same bottom-up synthesis strategy, MeO@silica was utilized as the silica source for MeO@ZSM-5 preparation. MeO@silica material was directly synthesized in a reverse-microemulsion mediated sol-gel process,28 i.e. without first synthesizing metal oxide NPs separately. A mixture of Brij58 (>99%, Sigma-Aldrich)(20g for Fe2O3@silica and 10g for NiO@silica) and 60 mL cyclohexane was heated to 500C in oil bath under stirring. Then, the iron nitrate or nickel nitrate aqueous solution and finally the ammonium hydroxide solution were added dropwise. Finally, 5g tetraethoxysilane was added dropwise to the microemulsion. Hydrolysis and condensation of the silica precursors were allowed to proceed for 2 hours at 50°C. MeO@SiO2 was precipitated by adding 2-propanol, and washed three times by centrifugation and redispersion. The product was dried at room temperature and

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calcined at 5000C to remove residual surfactant. The conversion of MeO@silica to MeO@ZSM-5 was then conducted at the same hydrothermal conditions described above for ZnO@ZSM-5 preparation. ZnO/ZSM-5. Zn/ZSM5 was prepared by incipient wetness impregnation using a Zn(NO3)2 solution. This impregnated Zn/ZSM5 sample was dried under vacuum at 373Kfor 12 h and treated in flowing dry air at 773Kfor 5hrs. Characterizations: X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements were performed with a high-resolution powder X-ray diffractometer (Bruker D8 Discover) using monochromatic Cu radiation at the wavelength of 1.54 Å using a beam voltage of 40kV at a current of 40mA. The diffraction patterns were recorded with a step of 0.020 (2θ) at 0.5 sec/step. The particle size of ZnO was estimated from this data via the standard Debye-Scherrer formula. SEM (JEOL JSM-6510LV field emission scanning electron microscope) was used to determine material morphology at beam voltage of 20kV. A thin palladium film was sputter-coated on the sample before measurement. The actual compositions were determined via Energy Disperse X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) on the SEM, with a collection time of 120-180 s. The materials nanostructure was determined by both TEM (JEOL-2000FX electron microscope) and high-resolution TEM (HRTEM, JEOL-2100) after dispersing the samples on a copper type-B support grid (Ted Pella Inc.). Surface area and mesoporosity are determined via nitrogen sorption in a Micromeritics ASAP 2020. Samples were degassed for 24 hours at 300°C under high vacuum prior to each analysis. Both nitrogen adsorption/desorption measurements were performed at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K). A typical test involved a 6-point Brunauer- Emmett-Teller (BET) analysis for total surface area measurement in the relative pressure range 0.1